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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 05/21/99 -- Vol. 17, No. 47

       Chair/Librarian: Mark Leeper, 732-817-5619, mleeper@lucent.com
       Factotum: Evelyn Leeper, 732-332-6218, eleeper@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist: Rob Mitchell, robmitchell@lucent.com
       HO Chair Emeritus: John Jetzt, jetzt@lucent.com
       HO Librarian Emeritus: Nick Sauer, njs@lucent.com
       Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/Athens/4824
       All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.

       The Science Fiction Association of Bergen County meets on the
       second Saturday of every month in Upper Saddle River; call
       201-447-3652 for details.  The Denver Area Science Fiction
       Association meets 7:30 PM on the third Saturday of every month at
       Southwest State Bank, 1380 S. Federal Blvd.

       ===================================================================

       1. Our Glorious Editor has been achieved further honors this  week.
       Roger  Ebert's  column  citing Mark Leeper's comments on STARS WARS
       was     republished     at     http://www.suntimes.com/output/answ-
       man/ebert16.html  (ninth  paragraph).   And  Mark's  dialogue  with
       "LawnMedic" has been featured by the "Cruel Site  of  the  Day"  at
       http://www.cruel.com/oldcruel  (May  18).   The  "Cruel Site of the
       Day" claims to be a "link to the world of  the  perturbed,  peeved,
       pensive,   and   postal."   It  doesn't  say  which  category  this
       particular article falls into.  [-ecl]

       ===================================================================

       2. This issue of THE MT VOID is brought to you in part by  Potent-8
       for  a  richer  and fuller life.  Ask your physician if Potent-8 is
       right for you.  (In a small number of cases usage of  Potent-8  has
       been  linked to increased risk of a particular kind of birth defect
       which in some parts of Puerto Rico has given rise  to  legends  and
       rumors of a goat-sucking vampire.)  [-mrl]

       ===================================================================

       3. A few years back there was a popular theme in movies  suggesting
       that  the  world  is growing too dependent on computers.  I seem to
       remember plots like computer controlled systems  claiming  that  we
       were  under attack from the Soviets.  One lone human has his doubts
       and refuses fire a missile to retaliate.  And of  course  it  turns
       out  that  the  human  was  right.   Nuclear war is averted and the
       audience is reassured that humans are better, more reliable, and in
       general superior to machines.  At least that is true in the movies.
       I am concerned that that may be a misimpression that could lead  to
       some dangerous decisions.

       The actual history of computer-involved disasters is more  a  mixed
       bag.   There is at least in folklore--but I do not know of any real
       confirmation--cases where a flock of migrating geese or the  rising
       sun  was  misinterpreted  by defense computers as incoming missiles
       and the computers suggested  returning  fire.   Now  what  is  more
       important to know is in what phase of testing were the programs.  I
       have no doubt that a complex decision-making computer program  will
       at  some  phase of its testing make some obviously wrong decisions.
       That is the point of testing  a  system.   The  system  is  refined
       during  testing  until  it is more and more dependable.  A computer
       system is a lot like a human in this regard.  Someone not very well
       trained  for  a  decision  making  job should not be given a lot of
       responsibility  and  autonomy  initially.   Once  the  person   has
       experience and his results carefully checked one gets a feeling for
       whether it is dependable.   Apparently  the  computer  program  was
       still   in   a  phase  where  it  could  be  over-ridden  by  human
       intervention.  To date I know of no major disaster  that  was  ever
       caused  by  relying  too heavily on a computer program.  Yes, there
       have been some small disasters, small by comparison to nuclear war.
       There  are  cases  of  people killed by software errors.  Certainly
       there was one case of a bad interface for error correction  on  the
       mechanism  to  set  the  dosage  on  an  X-ray  machine.  The X-ray
       technician made an error in setting the  dosage,  thought  she  had
       reset  it,  and  administered  a fatal dose of x-rays to a patient.
       That is bad enough, but so far there have been no  major  incidents
       where  multiple  people  were  killed  by  a  software problem.  In
       general computer systems have not been so trusted  that  they  have
       been  given  positions  of  real trust where the stakes are what we
       would consider to be really high.  About  the  worst  was  an  AT&T
       telephone outage.

       On the other hand we really have had some major  disasters  because
       humans  have decided that computers were wrong and have over-ridden
       them.  The Northeast power blackout of the late  1960s  would  have
       been limited to one small power grid when a human intervened to try
       to save that  grid.   The  operator  tried  to  save  the  grid  by
       diverting  power from another grid.  It was too much power and that
       grid started to go down.  An attempt was made to save that one  and
       one  grid  after  another went down in a domino effect.  Instead of
       one power grid going down, the whole northeast part of  the  United
       States  was  plunged  into darkness because a human did not trust a
       computer decision.

       There is a major example of  where  a  program  not  being  trusted
       almost  caused  what would have been the biggest disaster in United
       States history.  I will discuss that next week.  [-mrl]

       ===================================================================

       4. Let me add another quick  editorial.   There  was  just  another
       school shooting yesterday and people are up in arms to keep weapons
       out of schools.  That is fitting and proper.  HOWEVER, put yourself
       in  the  position  of  a  high school student, perhaps not a really
       brilliant one either.  You have access to a gun.  And you will need
       to  defend yourself today.  There is a kid who has been threatening
       you.  And the kid has studied martial arts for a  couple  of  years
       and  IN SPITE of the philosophy of martial arts NEVER being used in
       an evil cause, this kid is really scaring you  and  you  have  good
       reason  to  believe  he can hurt you.  About the only way to defend
       yourself is with the gun.  Do you take it or do you  go  to  school
       unprotected and take your lumps?

       If you think that gun control is the whole answer  to  violence  in
       schools  in  a  culture  where  every strip mall has a marital arts
       school to which doting parents bring their children,  think  again.
       [-mrl]

       ===================================================================

       5. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE'S A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM (a  film  review
       by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: The eagerly awaited summer release  of
                 Shakespeare's light fantasy tale of fairies and
                 dukes is surprisingly  mundane.   In  spite  of
                 some  good  acting  by  Stanley Tucci and Kevin
                 Kline, director Michael Hoffman  brings  little
                 innovative   or   interesting  to  the  telling
                 besides star power.  But  the  contribution  of
                 having familiar actors instead of good unknowns
                 in a Shakespeare play is minimal.  Rating: 5 (0
                 to 10), low +1 (-4 to +4)

       There was a time when seeing a particular Shakespeare play might be
       a  once-in-a-lifetime  opportunity.   People  would  rarely  have a
       chance to see two different companies  performing  the  same  play.
       Then it was sufficient to be simply providing Shakespeare.  That is
       not so any more.  Turner Classic Movies frequently plays  the  1935
       film version.  It is not so long since PBS broadcast a BBC version.
       In fact, the Internet Movie Database lists nine TV versions and  it
       does  not  list  the  comic  version featuring the Flying Karamazov
       Brothers.   If  a  filmmaker  wants  to  do  a  new  version  of  a
       Shakespeare  play, it should be at least in some way very original.
       It should have something that the previous versions do  not  offer.
       Certainly  two films that I thought did that were Kenneth Branagh's
       MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING and Ian McKellan's RICHARD III.  The  former
       managed  to  use  diction that made following the dialog easy and a
       pleasure to follow.  That and its pleasant Tuscan setting made  the
       film  a  real  joy.   And McKellan's reframing of RICHARD III as an
       alternate history with a Fascist takeover of Britain in  the  1930s
       stands  as  the  single  most exciting and inventive performance of
       Shakespeare I have ever seen.   The  new  WILLIAM  SHAKESPEARE'S  A
       MIDSUMMER  NIGHT'S  DREAM  was presenting a very familiar story, so
       with a fixed plot it should have  been  greatly  creative  in  some
       other  way.   It should have been as innovative as those films.  It
       was not.

       Michael Hoffman adapted the Shakespeare play and directed.  Hoffman
       did a beautiful job creating a sumptuous look and feel for the 1995
       film RESTORATION, but his ideas were far less rich or original  for
       WILLIAM  SHAKESPEARE'S  A  MIDSUMMER  NIGHT'S  DREAM.   As the film
       starts  we  are  immediately  plunged  into   cliche   with   Felix
       Mendelssohn's  "Midsummer  Night's  Dream."  It is a rather obvious
       choice and hardly one that is inspiring.  The first original  touch
       is  to  move  the  setting from ancient Athens to late 19th Century
       Monte Athene in Tuscany.  But there is something of a problem there
       almost  immediately.   The play has many references to its setting,
       and there is an immediate dissonance  to  see  Italy  and  hear  it
       called  Athens.   It is also jarring to have characters whose names
       are Theseus, Demetrius, Lysander, Helena, and Hermia.  The move  of
       location  is  probably an attempt to repeat the effect that Branagh
       achieved with his Tuscan setting, but it really does not  work  the
       same sort of magic.

       For those who do not know the story, I will say just  briefly  that
       Duke  Theseus  (David  Strathairn)  is  preparing  to wed Hippolyta
       (Sophie Marceau) when he is asked to settle  a  dispute  between  a
       father  and  daughter.   Egeus  (Bernard Hill, recently seen as the
       captain going down  with  the  ship  in  TITANIC)  has  arranged  a
       marriage   for  his  daughter  Hermia  (Anna  Friel)  to  Demetrius
       (Christian  Bale).   But  the  rebellious  daughter  instead  loves
       Lysander   (Dominic   West).    Another   woman,   Helena  (Calista
       Flockhart), loves Demetrius.  Getting involved into the  action  is
       also  a  traveling  theater  company preparing to put on a bad play
       about Pyramus (Bottom (Kevin Kline)).  And  as  if  that  were  not
       enough  in  another  part  of the forest is Oberon, King of Fairies
       (Rupert Everett) is having his  problems  with  his  queen  Titania
       (Michelle Pfeiffer).

       The stars of the film are really Stanley  Tucci  and  Kevin  Kline.
       Kline  has  a somewhat expanded role from the Shakespeare involving
       Bottom's wife who never  appeared  in  the  original  play.   These
       sequences  have  to be done without dialog since it is easier to do
       it that way than to get Shakespeare back to write lines  for  their
       interaction.  Stanley Tucci is almost always a pleasure to watch on
       the screen.  Here he does his rubber-faced thing a little too  much
       and  amazingly  he  overstays  his  welcome.  But Calista Flockhart
       (TV's Ally McBeal) manages to out-rubber-face  even  Tucci  and  to
       almost  achieve  the  level  of a Macaulay Culkin (not appearing in
       this film, thankfully).

       Sadly, the film is never as enchanting as it is supposed to  be  or
       even as it needs to be.  Many of the intended magical elements turn
       leaden.  Having Puck ride a bicycle again and again is just not all
       that  whimsical.   Having  him  ride a silly-looking plastic turtle
       intended to be real is even less  so.   Hoffman  even  has  a  mud-
       wrestling  scene  with Helena and Hermia.  Really.  The sequence of
       the play of "Pyramus and Thisbe" may be where  some  of  the  humor
       works  the  best  in  a sort of imitation Monty Python way.  Still,
       this sequence comes off as gratuitous filler, but  then  it  always
       did  in  the  original  play  also, so that is not Hoffman's fault.
       Once one accepts the Italian setting,  the  use  of  Italian  opera
       melodies is pleasant and does add to the mood, though when the same
       melodies are repeated one starts to wonder if there were  not  more
       to choose from.

       In spite of the cast, this is a competent but unexceptional version
       of  one  of Shakespeare's more popular plays.  I rate it 5 on the 0
       to 10 scale and a low +1 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

       ===================================================================

       6. ELECTION (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: An on-target satire  and  dark  comedy
                 about politics set around a high school student
                 council  election.   An  award-winning  teacher
                 tries to make sure the school's most successful
                 student does  not  run  unopposed  for  council
                 president.   The result is disaster for several
                 people.  Don't be put off by the fact the  film
                 is about a high school election.  This film has
                 some of the best writing of  any  film  so  far
                 this  year.  This is an intelligent, irritating
                 and in its  own  way  delightful  comedy  about
                 politics  in  America.   Rating:  8  (0 to 10),
                 high +2 (-4 to +4)

       The time is coming for student council  elections  at  Carver  High
       School.   Unopposed  for  president is Tracy Flick (played by Reese
       Witherspoon) the school's smug and snotty over-achiever.   This  is
       the  girl  who  seems  to  be in every school club, on every school
       committee.  Everyone knows that she is the best and nobody tries to
       compete  with  her.   What  few  people  know  is that she also was
       instrumental in the firing of a teacher for a sexual misconduct  in
       which  she  was  considerably  more  than  a  willing  victim.  Jim
       McAllister (Matthew Broderick) is the star teacher of  the  school,
       having  won the Teacher of the Year Award a record three years in a
       row.  He also was a friend of the fired teacher.  Partially because
       he knows that the indiscretion was not all the teacher's fault, and
       partially as a lesson in democratic principles to his students, Mr.
       McAllister decides to try to see if he can whip up some competition
       for Tracy.  The idealistic civics teacher convinces Paul Metzler, a
       likeable  jock sidelined by a broken leg, to run against Tracy.  He
       is the exact opposite of Tracy.  Less than bright in his studies he
       is  nevertheless a nice person with lots of friends.  Soon there is
       a surprise third counter-culture candidate running for  reasons  of
       her  own  and  collecting  the  vote  of all the disaffected of the
       school.  This small beginning leads to chaos that  engulfs  several
       people's lives, not the least of which is Mr.  McAllister's.

       ELECTION is a film that looks like it was shot in 16 millimeter and
       blown  up for the full sized screen.  The production values overall
       seem to have been designed for economy.  About the  only  place  it
       excels  is  that it has a really good script.  I call that a pretty
       good tradeoff.  In spite of the modest production budget  co-writer
       and  director  Alexander  Payne  has  managed  to  do  some  things
       extraordinarily well.  The lower-middle class is  rarely  shown  in
       other  films.   Character's  homes shown in films tend to be wither
       upscale or  on  the  level  of  trailer  parks.   Yet  the  housing
       developments   with   their   sparse  vegetation  strike  a  really
       believable note.  In fact the whole set of  inexpensive  production
       values tend to make this film seem all the more realistic.  Payne's
       only previous feature film was  CITIZEN  RUTH,  itself  not  a  bad
       social satire.  But ELECTION shows a considerable improvement.

       With the exception of the two leads, most of the  cast  has  little
       film  experience,  yet  the  acting  in  the  film  seems perfectly
       professional.  Matthew Broderick seems a little young for the  role
       of  the  teacher,  but  that could be just because he himself seems
       boyish.  Reese Witherspoon may well find that this  is  a  defining
       role  in  her  early  career.   While she did not seem to bring any
       special talents to her role in PLEASANTVILLE she is just perfect as
       the   smug   and  totally  self-absorbed,  over-achieving,  Monica-
       Lewinsky-in-training.  ELECTION is  a  satire  of  the  caliber  of
       Michael  Ritchie's  SMILE.   That  puts  it  miles  ahead of recent
       entries like WAG THE DOG.  SMILE and ELECTION would, in fact,  make
       an  excellent  double feature.  I give ELECTION an 8 on the 0 to 10
       scale and a high +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]
       ===================================================================

       7. THREE SEASONS (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: This is an American film  shot  in  Ho
                 Chi Minh City with a nearly all Vietnamese cast
                 looks at various aspects of  love,  self-image,
                 and  life  in  modern  Vietnam.  The images are
                 beautifully filmed but  the  story  telling  is
                 slow  and  somewhat  enigmatic  at  times.  The
                 stories  are  reminiscent   of   other   films.
                 Rating: 6 (0 to 10), +1 (-4 to +4)

       THREE SEASONS is an odd melding of  Asian  film  styling  with  the
       story  telling of Robert Altman.  Like Altman's SHORT CUTS the film
       involves  multiple  (in  this  case  four)  short   stories,   each
       developing  in  parallel  and  in  close geographical proximity but
       otherwise mostly unrelated.  Four plot lines are set in Ho Chi Minh
       City  and begin and end about the same time.  In one story a cyclo-
       driver becomes obsessed with a beautiful prostitute and decides  to
       do  whatever  it  takes to win her.  (A cyclo is a bicycle modified
       with a wide passenger seat in front to be used like  a  taxi.   One
       sees  them  frequently  in  Southeast Asia.)  In another plotline a
       woman comes to the city for a job picking flowers in a  lotus  pond
       and  selling  them  in  the  city.   She  becomes involved with the
       recluse who owns the lotus pond.  The third story involves a street
       boy  who  makes  his  living  selling  small  items  like cigarette
       lighters from a box.  When his box is stolen he must  get  it  back
       again  or  go  hungry.   The  fourth  plotline involves an American
       Vietnam  veteran  who  returns  to  Ho  Chi  Minh  City  driven  by
       conscience  to  find  his daughter whose mother he abandoned during
       the war.

       It is very difficult to tell stories of any real plot complexity in
       a  film  that  is  going  to  tell four stories in as little as 110
       minutes.  If one adds to it that the pacing of this or  many  Asian
       films.  Each of the four stories could probably be told in three or
       four sentences.  What is important is not the plot but the  texture
       of  the telling and the feeling for what has become of Saigon after
       it became Ho Chi Minh City.  We see a daily life that in some  ways
       is  not that different from what we have in the United States.  The
       story of the cyclo-driver and that of the  street  boy  could  take
       place  in  just about any big city with few modifications.  The man
       looking for his daughter, the least developed of the four  stories,
       might also, but would be much more likely to occur in Vietnam, with
       its particular problem of abandoned  mothers.   The  story  of  the
       lotus pond probably would not work any place but Asia.

       THREE SEASONS was written and directed by Tony Bui,  based  on  his
       own  stories.   Bui  was  born in Vietnam, but raised in the US and
       this constitutes a return to his parents' land.  It  is  the  first
       American  independent film shot in Vietnam since the war.  The film
       stays away from politics, however, no doubt in part because it  had
       to  be  passed  by  Communist censors and had to play in the United
       States.  Curiously they do not seem to object to the  film  calling
       the  city  Saigon  rather than its more politically correct name in
       Vietnam.  The film plays double duty as a fiction  film  and  as  a
       documentary  look  at what Bui saw when he returned to his country.
       Bui has the eye of an artist with much of the Asian sense of color.
       We see this in the cyclo-race that is the centerpiece of one of the
       stories and in the sensuous pleasure the camera takes in the bright
       red blossoms of a country scene.

       THREE SEASONS--where the title  comes  from  us  unclear  since  it
       seemed  to  me to take place over a much shorter period of time--is
       what used to be called a feast for the eyes but  remains  a  simple
       quiet  little  film and not one that says very much.  I rate it a 6
       on the 0 to 10 scale and a +1 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

       ===================================================================

       8.  I frequently have trouble meeting all the  commitments  I  make
       for  myself.  Some I miss more than others.  With STAR WARS EPISODE
       1: THE PHANTOM MENACE fresh in theaters I  would  like  to  have  a
       review  in  this issue.  However, I just saw it on Wednesday night,
       the night of its opening.   I  have  commitments  for  my  Thursday
       evening  that imply I cannot meet a Friday deadline for publishing.
       But I have had many people already ask me what  I  thought  of  the
       film.   A  review  next  week  will be of much less value.  So I am
       going to do something I have never done before.  I will publish  my
       review  in  progress.  My rating of the film is already in place, I
       know what I am going to say about the film.  That is in  my  notes.
       I  will  publish a barely started review and my notes so people can
       get a  feel  for  my  impressions  of  the  film.   Those  who  are
       interested  can  also  get some insight as to how I write a review.
       Here, without comment, is my current  review  and  the  notes  with
       which I will create the finished review.

       STAR WARS EPISODE 1: THE PHANTOM MENACE

       Capsule: What George Lucas does well, nobody else does any  better.
       Simply put this film probably shows the greatest visual imagination
       of any film ever made.  (The  only  non-STAR  WARS  contender  that
       comes  to  mind is the otherwise painful WHAT DREAMS MAY COME).  It
       even as a few interesting  science  fiction  ideas.   George  Lucas
       returns  to  many  of the values of Chapter 4, missing in the later
       episodes.  EPISODE I has a host  of  new  species,  another  mythic
       story,  a  few embarrassments, but overall a lot of fun.  Rating: 9
       (0 to 10), 3 (-4 to +4)

       When KING KONG was released the trailers said "this  was  what  the
       films  were  made  for."   It may be a bit of an overstatement, but
       they  were  implying  that  the  films  are  made  to  show  visual
       imagination,  to  translate  from  somebody's mind's eye to a movie
       screen.  And KING KONG did just that.  Willis O'Brien's stop-motion
       animation  was  a giant leap forward in translating images from the
       mind's eye to the movie  screen.   Things  then  stagnated  for  44
       years.  Ray Harryhausen refined stop-motion and made some marvelous
       films, but there were no major leaps  until  1977  and  STAR  WARS.
       This was really a big jump.  It was also the starting gun on a race
       to create new kinds of images on film.  Since  then  the  field  of
       special  effects has been rapidly developing.  In 1999 George Lucas
       can  no  longer  hope  to  create  a  film  so  far  ahead  of  the
       competition.  He can create a film that blends new effects with the
       best existing effects sufficiently to trump any other film that has
       ever  been  made.   For the most part he is competing only with his
       own previous films.  The only non-Lucasfilm to  really  compete  is
       the otherwise excruciating WHAT DREAMS MAY COME.

               %Plot

               %Acting

               %Style

       9 on the  0  to  10  scale  and  a  +3  on  the  -4  to  +4  scale.
       ================

                                        touches
          why does beheading kill droid
          in sw robots don't know obiwan, and vice versa
          character flies on non-aerodynamic wings
          much score from earlier films
          more politics than one thinks of many mythic elements
          twists in expected plot but not contradiction: 	       uncle did not know father
          religious symbolism tied in knot
          more advanced technology loses to more primative one
          little details in background, this is not all happening 	       in these worlds
          larger context for other films including what is force
          know where characters are going, makes more interesting
          fights more interesting than in matrix
          back to polygot universe

          tell doesn't show--not like lucas overly comic jar jar binks
          little boy heroics fights too long
          feel, don't think
          accents make hard to understand
                                        style
          sensibility of samurai film, distant hero, 	       more distant princess
          opening fox banner and star wars
                                          plot
          taxation starts it all, like american revolution
          mystical birth
          federation vs republic
          must stop at tatooine, picks up anakin
          queen sends handmaid to coruscade
          jedi and blockade, fired on
                                   commentary
          binks descended from hadrosaurs
          will change fantasy, scenes will show up many places
          what lucas does he does better than anybody else
          reviewers i liked like this film
          more imaginationation, visual and plot than any other 	       film in history
          wheelies fro oz
          water city from abyss
          sr71 blackbird deathstar, trench death of jedi from star wsrs
          ben hur chariot race
                                    acting
          the professional, ann frank
          stiff as queen chinese imperial robes
          distant, but much an obiwan figure
          trainspotting, does not leave much impression
          a lot of personality for a young actor
          Jackson nominal role--wasted
          Stamp nominal role

       [-mrl]

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          HO 1J-621 732-817-5619
                                          mleeper@lucent.com